"There is a river whose streams shall make glad the city of God." --Psalm 46:4

My Photo
Serving God with His people at Faith OPC has been a great joy and blessing. When I grow up, I want to umpire Little League Baseball. I will revel on that day when I can say to a 10-year-old boy after four pitched balls, "Take a walk in the sunshine." My wife of 30+ years, Peggy, consistently demonstrates the love of Christ and remains my very best friend. Our six children, our four lovely, sweetie-pie daughters-in-law, and our four grandchildren serve as resident theologians.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

I'll Never Fall in Love Again?


We must recover the Protestant confidence in the comprehensibility of this world. Rather than pursuing superstitious worldviews that focus on cosmic battles between demons and angels, we should regain our love affair with the material world of God's creation--not in the sense of replacing our hope for heaven with a satisfaction with earth, but in the realization that the entire focus of Christianity and its biblical text is the unfolding of God's purposes right here in this world, in real human history.

From Michael Horton's chapter,
Christianity and Modern Science: Can't We Be Friends?, found in Where in the World is the Church, p. 135

G. Mark Sumpter

Monday, July 13, 2009

Walk it Out, Albert, Walk it Out



As St. Louis All-Star first baseman Albert Pujols boldly keeps talking of the walk he has with the Lord Jesus Christ, he will get tested more and more about his profession.

He'll be in the hometown limelight tonight and tomorrow night with the 2009 Major League All Star campaign going on. Walk that talk, Albert, walk it out.


He commented today in USA TODAY that's he clean, that he doesn't do "that crap," referring to roids. May God draw near to him and give him an increasing faithful testimony before a stage that is so racked with hypocrisy.


G. Mark Sumpter

Children as Sign Posts


I plan to offer quotes and commentary based on the writing and speaking of OPC ministers, teachers, pastors and ruling elders from time to time. We'll call it, OPC Cooking. Supper's on boys, come and get it.

Below is a quote by the late Charles G. Dennison, an OPC pastor. I have greatly valued his writing and speaking. If you get a chance to pick up and listen to his lectures on the OPC's history and culture done at Mid-America Reformed Seminary, I believe he did these lectures back in 1992 or 1993, get em. They're superior scholarship, well-delivered and practically insightful.


OK. To Mr. Dennison's paragraph from an OPC publication,

...all in the covenant legally speaking are beckoned and judged by the covenant "communionally" speaking. At issue here is not just an accounting for covenant desertion but more positively an approach to covenant children. They are in the covenant and at the same time beckoned and scrutinized by the covenant in its ideal form. The sign and seal by which they are included in the covenant is a testimony to the radical character of sin and God's grace. Far from a witness to their superiority, it evidences a common heritage in sinful humanity from which they have been separated by a gracious covenant for fellowship with God. From the book, Pressing Toward the Mark, "Thoughts on the Covenant," pp.10-11.

Comments:

1. Commonly, theologians refer to the legal arrangement of the covenant in that there's a bond between two parties. Simply put, there's a legal tie between the parties; it's an agreement.


2. Next, theologians speak of the intimacy, closeness, fellowship or communion between the two parties of the covenant. Mr. Dennison calls it the "communional" aspect. The parties of the covenant are to draw near, come close, and enjoy the sweetness of living fellowship.
Only the eternally elect know this closeness with God.

3. Mr. Dennision speaks of the role that the communional aspect plays with the legal. His point? The absence of the communional aspect is telling. When a man, woman or child does not tend to the conditions of drawing near to God, he or she backslides, grows cold, maybe eventually hardens himself or hershelf and falls away from the covenant. Such ones desert God, cutting off themselves from intimacy and fellowship. In the words of Jesus, fruit is missing. The presence or absence of covenant communion becomes a standard of judgment---is this person walking with Christ or deserting Christ?


4. Next, Mr. Dennison speaks of covenant children. What strikes me here is how Dennison speaks of baptized covenant children as a model for all humanity, for all ages over the span of life. All covenant members are being summoned about something seen in the sign and seal applied to covenant children. Along with other reasons, the sign of water baptism is applied to children to make sure all of us grasp two things: 1) our sin is ugly, real and must be continually brought under God's love and forgiveness over one's lifetime, 2) God's grace is beautiful, real and must be relied on over one's whole life. Once again, Dennison is saying: Covenant communion judges our walk with the Lord--do we keep acknowledging our sin and need from cleansing, from the start of our days on earth? Do we keep acknowledging that where sin abounded, grace abounds more and more, deeper and deeper from start to finish, from our earliest age to our last breath?


5. Baptized children show us the truth about all humanity. Children, right from the get-go when a baby comes into the world----boom----right out of the womb, from the youngest days of life, carry the billboard sign: Sinners Need Washing.


G. Mark Sumpter

One Potato, Two Potato